z-logo
Premium
A strategy to reduce the sensitivity of inhomogeneous magnetization transfer (ihMT) imaging to radiofrequency transmit field variations at 3 T
Author(s) -
Soustelle Lucas,
Troalen Thomas,
Hertanu Andreea,
Mchinda Samira,
Ranjeva JeanPhilippe,
Guye Maxime,
Varma Gopal,
Alsop David C.,
Duhamel Guillaume,
Girard Olivier M.
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
magnetic resonance in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.696
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1522-2594
pISSN - 0740-3194
DOI - 10.1002/mrm.29055
Subject(s) - reproducibility , nuclear magnetic resonance , magnetization transfer , voxel , region of interest , flip angle , rf power amplifier , saturation (graph theory) , sensitivity (control systems) , materials science , computational physics , physics , magnetic resonance imaging , mathematics , computer science , optoelectronics , medicine , statistics , artificial intelligence , electronic engineering , amplifier , cmos , combinatorics , engineering , radiology
Purpose To minimize the sensitivity of inhomogeneous magnetization transfer gradient‐echo (ihMT‐GRE) imaging to radiofrequency (RF) transmit field ( B 1 + ) inhomogeneities at 3 T. Methods The ihMT‐GRE sequence was optimized by varying the concentration of the RF saturation energy over time, obtained by increasing the saturation pulse power while extending the sequence repetition time (TR). Different protocols were tested using numerical simulations and human in vivo experiments in the brain white matter (WM) of healthy subjects at 3 T. The sensitivity of the ihMT ratio (ihMTR) to B 1 + variations was investigated by comparing measurements obtained at nominal transmitter adjustments and following a 20% global B 1 + drop. The resulting relative variations ( δ ihMTR ) were evaluated voxelwise as a function of the local B 1 + distribution. The reproducibility of the protocol providing minimal B 1 + bias was assessed in a test‐retest experiment. Results In line with simulations, ihMT‐GRE experiments conducted at high concentration of the RF energy over time demonstrated strong reduction of the B 1 + inhomogeneity effects in the human WM. Under the optimal conditions of 350‐ms TR and 3‐µT root mean square (RMS) saturation power, 73% of all WM voxels presented δ ihMTR below 10%. Reproducibility analysis yielded a close‐to‐zero systematic bias (ΔihMTR = −0.081%) and a high correlation (ρ² = 0.977) between test and retest experiments. Conclusion Concentrating RF saturation energy in ihMT‐GRE sequences mitigates the sensitivity of the ihMTR to B 1 + variations and allows for clinical‐ready ihMT imaging at 3 T. This feature is of particular interest for high and ultra‐high field applications.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here